Events

« Monday November 02, 2009 »
Mon
Start: 6:30 pm
Each month, the Elliott Bay Book Club reads and discusses the best in contemporary fiction with the occasional classic thrown in for good measure. Our selection for this month is The Pets by Bragi Olafsson. Back in Reykjavik after a vacation in London, Emil Halldorsson is waiting for a call from a beautiful girl, Greta, that he met on the plane ride home, and he's just put on a pot of coffee when an unexpected visitor knocks on the door. Peeking through a window, Emil spies an erstwhile friend—Havard Knutsson, his one-time roommate and current resident of a Swedish mental institution—on his door step, and he panics, taking refuge under his bed and hoping the frightful nuisance will simply go away. An alternately dark and hilarious story of cowardice, comeuppance, and assumed identity, the breezy and straightforward style of The Pets belies its narrative depth, and disguises a complexity that grows with every page. Berlingske Tidende called it, "Brilliantly written and funny, no, very funny....The Pets is one of the best pieces of Nordic literature I've read in a long time." --DUE TO ELECTION DAY, THIS BOOK GROUP IS MEETING ONE DAY EARLY!--
Start: 7:00 pm
Co-presented with COPPER CANYON PRESS. We are delighted to host this reading by esteemed, award-winning University of Washington poet Heather McHugh. While it is a welcome return to Elliott Bay, there is some novelty at work this evening (new poems aside). She is here with a much-awaited new collection, yes, Upgraded to Serious. This is her first book with Copper Canyon Press. It's also her first reading hereabouts since receiving one of this year's prestigious MacArthur Foundation Fellowships—another reason to celebrate. "McHugh's eighth book finds this acclaimed poet as odd and entertaining as ever, with her trademark slippery associative lines and jagged stanzas, but also subtly sobered by growing older while living through the grim political climate of the last eight years. McHugh's short, jerky lines, odd rhymes, bemused gravity and slant perspective on the world bring Emily Dickinson to mind ... McHugh remains one of our most important and unusual poets in a world where YouTube makes every experience fodder for entertainment and a person 'cannot die again; and I / do nothing but re-live.'" - Publishers Weekly.
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